Ray Robinson | |
---|---|
Pitcher | |
Threw: Left | |
Negro league baseball debut | |
1938, for the Newark Eagles | |
Last appearance | |
1947, for the Philadelphia Stars | |
Teams | |
|
Raymond Robinson was an American baseball pitcher in the Negro leagues and minor leagues. He played with the Newark Eagles in 1938,the Cincinnati Buckeyes in 1942,and the Baltimore Elite Giants in 1947. [1]
William L. "Bobby" Robinson was an American Negro league baseball player. He was known as the "Human Vacuum Cleaner" because of his fielding ability at third base.
The New York Black Yankees were a professional Negro league baseball team based in New York City;Paterson,New Jersey;and Rochester,New York. Beginning as the independent Harlem Stars,the team was renamed the New York Black Yankees in 1932 and joined the Negro National League in 1936,and remained in the league through 1948.
James Edgar Claxton was a black Canadian-American baseball pitcher,and the first black man to play organized white baseball in the twentieth century.
Roy E. Partlow was an American pitcher in Negro league baseball. He played between 1934 and 1951. In 1946,he was one of the first African American players signed by the Brooklyn Dodgers organization. He spent part of that season playing with Jackie Robinson at Montreal before being sent to the Trois-Rivières Royals.
Charles "Lefty" Robinson was a Negro leagues pitcher from 1923 to 1932. He pitched and played for the Birmingham Black Barons,St. Louis Stars and Atlanta Black Crackers.
Henry Frazier Robinson,nicknamed "Slow",was an American Negro league catcher for the Kansas City Monarchs,New York Black Yankees,and Baltimore Elite Giants between 1942 and 1950.
The 1938 Memphis Red Sox baseball team represented the Memphis Red Sox in the Negro American League (NAL) during the 1938 baseball season. The team compiled a 40–35–1 (.533) record and won the NAL pennant.
John Scott was an American Negro league outfielder in the 1940s.
William Hipple Galloway,nicknamed "Hippo",was an American-Canadian professional baseball player. Born in Buffalo,New York,Galloway grew up in Dunnville,Ontario,and is considered "the first black Canadian to play organized baseball."
James Dorsey Robinson was an American Negro league pitcher between 1898 and 1905.
Charles Culver,also known as "Charlie Calvert",was an American Negro league infielder between 1916 and 1920.
Walter Kenneth Robinson,nicknamed "Skin Down",is an American former Negro league infielder who played between 1937 and 1944.
Walter "Newt" Robinson was a Negro league shortstop in the 1920s.
Jacob T. Robinson was a professional baseball third baseman in the Negro leagues. He played with the Chicago American Giants in 1947.